The Bride’s Baby
Product Description Events Manager Sylvie Smith is organizing a meeting brilliant fundraising: a wedding show in a townhouse. Even pretending to be a bride had been roped. . . a girlfriend, and five months pregnant! The bride, everyone is talking about! Do not make every girl’s dream of a wedding without the costs of design, but it is not Sylvie. Long Bourne Court was her ancestral home, and she just discovered that the new owner Tom McFarlane is the secret of her baby’s father. Now. . . More>>


I have this book for two reasons. . . First was free and the second I thought it would be easy to read. I’ve learned my lesson. The fact that it’s free does not mean, should I download. Although the plan was a good and simple, the author has written a book confusing and irritating. I stopped reading three quarters of the way through, because I could not bear. Rating: 5.1
I am very happy that I did not pay for it. Synario was too stupid for words. Author has a very nice style of writing, the only reason he stayed. . . But someone must manage its lands to help. Rating: 5.2
boring predictable tale of an insecure new ones or repeats. no substance. Rating: 5.2
I’ll be the first to admit – I am not a romance reader. Why, then, Baby of the Bride? Well, to be honest, it was a free download to my Kindle, on Sunday afternoon was fast approaching, and I was looking for a quick read. From the first pages, I knew this would be difficult to overcome. Was not so much character development (Sylvie is nice, funny and simple enough to be attractive at risk), nor the act (the tension between Sylvie and Tom is covered perfectly). What was difficult, frankly, the language. I’ve never read Liz Fielding, but it was obvious they write a page from a British perspective, and unfortunately never quite this perspective makes the transition to the “global.” The vocabulary was, at times, enigmatic and the phrasing was often cumbersome and difficult to read, understand at first, and drove me crazy punctuation (use single quotes instead of quotes.) In addition, the entirely predictable conclusion of characters filling the page paragraphs waxing poetic about their deepest thoughts (ad nauseam, I would add), and repetition of the theme of the wedding, and I fear Fielding is the height of a good reading. I’m glad it was free. Rating: 5.2
Very predictable story, but read what you expect from a free country? There were some funny moments. Rating: 5.3